By: Russ Kamp, CEO, Ryan ALM, Inc.
I have the pleasure of speaking at the Opal/LATEC conference on Thursday. My panel has been given the topic of Risk On or Risk Off: How Are You Adjusting Your Portfolio, and Which Investment Risks Concern You Most? I think it is an incredibly timely discussion given the many cross-currents in the markets today.
Generally speaking, what is risk? At Ryan ALM, Inc. we would say that risk is the failure to achieve the objective. What is the objective in managing a defined benefit pension plan? We believe that the primary objective is to secure the promised benefits at a reasonable cost and with prudent risk. We don’t believe that it is a return objective.
However, most DB pension systems are NOT focused on securing the promised benefits, but they are engaged in developing an asset allocation framework that cobbles together diversified (overly perhaps) asset classes and investment strategies designed to achieve an annual return (ROA) target that has been established through the contributions of the asset consultant, actuary, board of trustees, and perhaps internal staff, if the plan is of sufficient size to warrant (afford) an internal management capability.
Once that objective has been defined, the goal(s) will be carefully addressed in the plan’s investment policy statement (IPS), which is a road map for the trustees and their advisors to follow. It should be reviewed often to ensure that those goals still reflect the trustees’ wishes. The review should also incorporate an assessment of the current market environment to make sure that the exposures to the various asset classes reflect today’s best thinking.
There are numerous potential risks that must be assessed from an investment standpoint. Some of those include market (beta), credit, liquidity, interest rates, and inflation. For your international managers, currency and geopolitical risk must be addressed. From the pension management standpoint, one must deal with both operational and regulatory risk. Some of these risks carry greater weight, such as market risk, but each can have an impact on the performance of your pension plan.
However, there are going to be times when a risk such as inflation will dominate the investing landscape (see 2022). Understanding where inflation MAY be headed and its potential impact on interest rates and corporate earnings is a critical input into how both bonds and stocks will likely perform in the near-term. Being able to assess these potential risks as a tool to adjust your funds asset allocation could reduce risk and help mitigate the negative impact of significant drawdowns that will impact the plan’s funded status and contribution expenses. Of course, the ability to reduce or increase exposures will depend on the ranges that have been established around asset class exposures (refer to your IPS).
So, where are we today? Is it risk on or risk off as far as the investing community is concerned? It certainly appears to me that most investors continue to take on risk despite extreme equity valuations, sticky, and perhaps worsening inflation, leading to an uncertain path for U.S. interest rates, and geopolitical risk that can be observed in multiple locations from the Middle East, to Ukraine/Russia, and China/Taiwan. The recent change in the administration and policy changes related to the use of tariffs has created uncertainty, if not anxiety, among the investment community.
So, how are you adjusting your portfolio? If your plan is managed similarly to most where all the assets are focused on the ROA, the ability to adjust allocations based on the current environment is likely limited to those ranges that I described above. Also, who can market time? I would suggest that the best way to adjust your portfolio given today’s uncertainty is to adopt an entirely different asset allocation framework. Instead of having all of the assets focused on that ROA objective, bifurcate your asset allocation into liquidity and growth buckets.
By adopting this strategy, liquidity is guaranteed to be available when needed to make those pesky monthly benefit payments. In addition, you’ve just bought time, an extremely important investment tenet, for the remainder of the assets (growth/alpha) to now grow unencumbered. The liquidity bucket will provide a bridge over choppy waters churned up by underperforming markets. Yes, there appears to be significant uncertainty in today’s investment environment. Instead of throwing up your hands and accepting the risks because you have limited means to act, adopt the new asset allocation structure before it is too late to protect your plan’s funded status.
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